Financial, swing-trading and Elliott Wave stock analysis for short-term traders.
Disclaimer: These articles are neither buy nor sell recommendations. You must do your own analysis and consider your own risk, money management, and trading strategy before placing any trades.

Saturday, January 07, 2017

Estée Lauder Forms Ending Triangle in Wave-IV

When analyzing a chart, I typically start with the unadjusted weekly chart to view the broader picture and ascertain the overall trend before zooming in to the daily and then the 30-minute chart. In the case of The Estée Lauder Companies, Inc. (NYSE: EL) the weekly chart did not provide the clarity we needed. It doesn't help that the company exercised a 2:1 stock split in late January, 2012. Viewing the unadjusted chart following a split like that dramatically skews the chart pattern, so we have to go with the version that adjusts for splits and dividends.

Since it was clear that the current pattern started well before the time frame shown on the weekly chart, we instead turned our attention to the monthly. All we're really looking for in this case is the overall trend and a good Elliott Wave count at the higher level. The monthly did provide that perspective.

EL Monthly Chart

Sure enough, we can see that the current trend started in March 2009, near the end of the last major financial crisis. Three of the five Elliott impulse waves have completed with the fourth either in progress or just completed. We'll talk more about that when discussing the daily chart. Furthermore, each of the two completed impulse waves subdivided quite nicely into five distinct sub-waves. With this pattern in focus, we can now turn ourselves to the daily chart to determine any potential setups.

EL Daily Chart

Notice the conflicting trend signal between the monthly and the daily charts. On the monthly chart, the 200-period moving average is sloping upward and price is well above that line. From the monthly perspective, the stock is clearly in an uptrend. On the daily chart, the 200-period moving average is sloping downward and price is well below that line. From the daily chart, the stock is clearly in a downtrend. In fact, our short-term analysis of this stock using only the daily chart on 30 November 2016 (The Grape's Vine: Estée Lauder a Short Play Following Pullback) reached that conclusion and we presented a short trade scenario. That play is still possible, mind you, since it still has not triggered. The evidence now, though, driven primarily from a broader view obtained from the monthly chart, suggests the potential for an upside move as well.

The completion of Wave-III is marked on the chart, and that's obtained directly from the monthly. An A-B-C pattern emerged from there, however the bottom of Wave-IV cannot yet be considered complete. We have a triangle pattern coming off the end of sub-wave v in Wave-C. From it's position, it could be a leading diagonal heading into the next Wave-A as part of a complex correction in which the second correction is a zig-zag pattern. More likely, however, we'll find that this is actually an ending diagonal signalling the termination of sub-wave v and Wave-C. (In that case, of course, we'd have to adjust the labeling on the chart.)

There's other evidence on the chart that Wave IV may be completing and a Wave-V impulse is set to begin. The volume pattern is showing a lot of demand at the support line formed by the base of the triangle. Upward moves are signalling far greater strength than downward moves. Adding to that, we see an RSI(9) oscillator that appears to be strengthening. It appears from the daily chart that the supply that pushed this stock to its 52-week lows is near exhaustion. Friday's close above the 50-day moving average and above the top of the triangle comprise a strong signal for a long position.

The 30-minute chart should complete the picture for us.

EL 30-Minute Chart

Interestingly, the trend on the 30-minute is flat. The 200-period moving average is horizontal (i.e. trendless) although price is currently above that line. The last move on the daily chart subdivides on the 30-minute into a well-defined 5-wave impulse. That the impulse completed just prior to the close on Friday and the final candle is a long red candle on high volume suggests there's a pull-back potential as we head into next week. There's also a bearish divergence on the RSI(9) oscillator, warning us of impending weakness. That further strengthens the idea that there will be a pullback in the short-term.

An A-B-C correction on the 30-minute provides a couple of very good entry points for a long position. If you're an aggressive trader, then there's a possible long entry at the diagonal support line in dotted green. A second entry if that line is breached is at the horizontal support level (not drawn) around $78.83. (Remember that support and resistance levels are areas, not actual lines. I like to provide a fuzzy .25% above and .25% below the line on a daily chart as the rough area around which the price may reverse. On a 30-minute chart, I use .15% above and below as the measure since traders at this level will have much tighter stops.)

Conservative traders also have two possible entries. The first is just above the high of Friday's pattern. The second is above the high shown on the 30-minute chart dating back to 9-December. Either way, you want both the overall market and the stock moving strongly in your direction when entering the trade. Be sure volume confirms the move.

EL doesn't report earnings until 2 February, and we don't anticipate another dividend before the end of February. From a major news perspective, therefore, there's nothing currently on the company's schedule that would impact the flow of the trade. So for us on the swing side, the decision we need to make is if this is now a long setup with the break of that triangle, or if there's potentially another move to the bottom of the triangle before a breakout to either side. We'll be playing whichever way this stock decides to break.